Episode 113: June 27, 2008
Grammar Girl here.
Today’s topic is “Nothing Ages Writing Faster Than Slang.”
Guest writer Sal Glynn writes
Slang is made of informal words and phrases that originate in speech, and often includes substitutions for formal words, like “ride” or “wheels” for a car. "Getting down" or "coming down," "tripping," "throwing a spaz," "digging it," "groove," and "so not into" or "so into" anything are all slang.
It’s the all-night amusement park of language, where different subcultures like artists and street criminals get to play with words and meaning. But nothing ages writing faster than slang.
Can You Dig It?
In the 1950s, stand-up comedian and jazz shaman Lord Buckley worried that his nightclub audiences had missed out on the stories of Mahatma Gandhi, Marquis de Sade, and Abraham Lincoln, along with many fictional luminaries. The embrace of the new in music, painting, and writing was leaving the classics behind. So Buckley translated the old into street talk and the slang of hipsters to revitalize the stories before they were lost.
This is what he did with the Marc Antony speech in William Shakespeare’s JULIUS CAESAR, Act three, Scene two:
Hipsters, flipsters, and finger-poppin’ daddies, knock me your lobes;
I came here to lay Caesar out, not to hip you to him. The bad jazz that a cat blows wails long after he’s cut out.
The groovy is often stashed within their frames;
So don’t put Caesar down. (1)
Clearly what worked then doesn’t work now.
Contemporary readers have to return to the iambic pentameter source to understand what Lord Buckley had laid down:
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears;
I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him. The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interred with their bones;
So let it be with Caesar. (2)